Helps direct those wishing to achieve
self-awareness so that they may learn how to express their deep inner
thoughts and feelings.

The Master's extraordinary devotion to
God's word and work is a powerful stream that runs throughout his soul's
incarnations on Earth as he has stood staunch in the role of advocate,
teacher, and exemplar before our spirits soaring unto Love.

El Morya was embodied as Abraham, the
ancient patriarch who emerged from Ur of the Chaldees to become the
prototype and progenitor of the twelve tribes of Israel.

Returning as Melchior, one of the three
wise men of the East, he followed the star that portended the birth of the
best of his seed who would fulfill all the promises of God unto his
spiritual descendants.

As Arthur, king of the Britons, he
summoned knights of the Round Table and ladies of the court of Camelot to
quest the Holy Grail and to attain through initiation the inner mysteries of
Christ.

Appearing again on Britain's soil as
Thomas Becket as well as Thomas More, both martyred, he twice played the
role of defender of the Faith and challenger of King Henry--also twice born
(Henry II and VIII), and twice the oppressor.

In the sixteenth century, his soul's
journey took him to the East in the person of Akbar, greatest of Mogul
emperors, and in the nineteenth to Ireland to be her poet laureate Thomas
Moore.

Next he appeared as El Morya Khan, perhaps
the most renowned of the Tibetan mahatmas. Paradoxically, little
biographical information of a traditional nature is available about El Morya
Khan. It is known that he was born a Rajput prince in the Indian class of
warriors and rulers esteemed for their courage and honor. The date of his
birth is uncertain.

What makes the life of El Morya so notable
is his far-reaching work in the merging of the ancient spiritual truths of
the East with the traditions of the West. This was accomplished largely
through the founding of the Theosophical Society in the latter part of the
last century and the subsequent instruction released through that
organization by the Master Morya and his longtime friend, the Master Koot
Hoomi Lal Singh. This instruction came in part in the form of personal
letters addressed to but a handful of Theosophical students, chelas of the
"Mahatma of the Himavat." These letters are now on file with the British
Museum in London.

Found also within the society's literature
are occasional awe-filled testimonies of the few Theosophists that were
visited by this Himalayan adept who, for the most part, preferred to remain
unidentified by the outer world. The writings of these disciples reveal that
many strove for even the slightest contact with El Morya.

"Djwhal Khul, Kuthumi and El Morya were
Tibetan Buddhists, although very universalistic in their approach. These 3
great Masters were all physically incarnated in the Himalayas and lived
close to each other. They could materialize right before your eyes. Kuthumi
did so often for Madam Blavatsky. Written letters from them often
materialized for her."